TAO Breaks $300, But Is Bittensor’s AI Hype Running Ahead of Reality?
The post TAO Breaks $300, But Is Bittensor’s AI Hype Running Ahead of Reality? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
TAO crossed $300, driven by AI sector momentum and growing subnet activity. Analysts highlight low real revenue, with estimates between $3 million and $15 million annually. Major subnets like Chutes rely heavily on token subsidies rather than sustainable income. Bittensor’s native token TAO finally punched through the stubborn $300 level this week, a ceiling it had been teasing for weeks. Crypto traders celebrated, pointing to subnet growth, bullish chart setups, and a full-blown AI sector frenzy as the fuel behind the move. But not everyone is convinced it lasts. Pine Analytics Throws Cold Water Research firm Pine Analytics just published one of the most detailed bear cases written on Bittensor, and the numbers are uncomfortable. At a $2.6 billion market cap, TAO looks powerful on paper. Bitcoin-style tokenomics, a 21 million hard cap, a halving in December 2025 that cut daily emissions in half, a Grayscale ETF application filed for the NYSE, and a public endorsement from NVIDIA’s Jensen Huang. Pine Analytics isn’t disputing any of that. Their question is: can the network actually generate enough real revenue to justify the price? The Revenue Problem Nobody Talks About Across all 128 subnets on the Bittensor network, total identifiable external revenue ranges from $3 million to $15 million per year. That puts TAO trading at 175 to 200 times its annual revenue. High-growth SaaS companies rarely sustain above 50x. AI infrastructure giants like CoreWeave were valued at 15 to 25x. Bittensor’s implied multiple is 4 to 10 times higher than the most aggressively valued comparable in either crypto or traditional tech. The Chutes Illusion The starkest example is Chutes, Bittensor’s biggest subnet. It markets its inference pricing at 85% below AWS, with genuinely impressive usage numbers: 400,000 users and 101 billion tokens processed daily. But those low prices are not from…
Filed under: News - @ March 25, 2026 10:27 am